No, thats KnobertsonOriginally Posted by teddy
Looks like Jarvis just got jailed
wtf ! This is utter nonsense.
I sometime wonder where people get their ideas and what makes people state erroneous ideas with such conviction.
The Chinese word for Money is 'Bi'. (Renmin bi (RMB) literally means 'peoples money') Yuan is the traditional name for the currency having been replaced by the Commies with renminbi,it is now coming back into more common usage.
“If we stop testing right now we’d have very few cases, if any.” Donald J Trump.
In Shanghai I found most people said 'kwai', if I had been in Thailand and heard that word as often I would have started to get a little worried.
It is like saying Sterling and Pounds in the UK.Originally Posted by Milkman
Not!Originally Posted by Butterfly
What a fucking idiot you show yourself to be, yet again.Originally Posted by wefearourdespot
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[edit] Renminbi yuan, 1955-
Main article: Renminbi
A new yuan was introduced in 1955 at a rate of 10,000 old yuan = 1 new yuan. It is known as the renminbi yuan.
whilst WeAreAnArsehole may have been correct many years ago, as the top quote shows, the Yuan, which was the official currency became the new Yuan, or Renminbi YuanYuan in Chinese literally means a "round object" or "round coin". During the Qing Dynasty, the yuan was a round and silver coin.
Thank you for the continued comments.
A special thanks to "wefearourdespot."
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Yes but words can evolve and change, the meanings can become something other, just as once upon a time had someone been called 'awful' it would have been a compliment, this meant ‘full of awe’ i.e. something wonderful, delightful, amazing. However, over time it has evolved to mean exactly the opposite. Just as 'nice' comes from the Latin ‘not to know’. Originally a ‘nice person’ was someone who was ignorant or unaware.Originally Posted by DrAndy
So maybe WeBeAnArsehole is not so awful after all, and in fact an extremely nice person.
he is more than nice
But people in Shanghai speak Shanghainese, not mandarin.
Remninbi is (correct me if I am wrong) from the Mandarin "REMNIN" Which means "of the people" so it is sort of "The Peoples currency" like Remnin guang chang" The Peoples park or place,
But yes, "Kwai" is used in Shanghai, but try using that in Beijing or Hong Kong...it's like trying to teach someone to speak english using French or Welsh....when I worked in Shanghai, most of the taxis couldn't speak MANDARIN!
You could speak perfect phrases of Mandarin, and they would just look at you like Manuel from Fawlty Towers...."Que?"
The Holiday Inn was even more fun...Pudong Dja Rue Dja Dee-a, fuck I should have been a linguist. wasted I am....every night to be honest!
eg, the hotel "Shangrila" was totally unknown unless you pronounced it using 4 sylables "SHANG GA REE LA"
They couldn't pronounce CARREFOURE, so you had to use "JA LER FOO"
An interesting thread, one in which the OP asks, ?"how do you pronounce..." on a test based forum. Thus opening the debate on how the transliterations are pronounced.Originally Posted by Milkman
HOW THE FUCK IS ANYONE GOING TO ANSWER THIS QUESTION? I mean really, the collection of letters you will see here as "pronunciations" are merely a re-arranged set of phonetic rules up to your interpretation are they not?
I really liked this one:
Originally Posted by Dug
Then Why put the fucking "r" in there?!?
So where are you left? Further out than you were before? Surely not any closer?
Milky is almost always polite he thanks the posters he keep the dialog going. But, You gotta admit, he is a lunatic.
^ sounds like you have a bit of a dongbei accent there Dug
^ Are you British?
The "r" in the middle or end of the word has the hanging "aw" sound.
pretty sure i was on the subject. Foolis thing to do really ask "how to pronounce.." on a fucking text based forum. So the subject cold be; " how to pronounce.." Or, "how stupid is it to ask the pronunciation of..." What the fuck do you know?Originally Posted by Dug
As a matter of interest milkman, why do you want to know?
Maybe he's just trying to kill the cat.Originally Posted by Dug
I heard that from an expat who had worked in China a few years ago. Wiki gives a slightly different story, but what counts is that there are not two different currencies in China like Butterfly suggested (my reply was aimed at correcting that). China isn't like Cuba.
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